Tag: captions

  • Advocating for Captions on the Web

    I recently discovered that NBC now has some old episodes of  the Emergency series posted on their website.  As a kid, I loved that show, even though I had to lipread my way through it.  This was before the days of captioning on TV.  And today, I feel like I’m right back in the 70s– because there’s no captioning on the TV episodes that are displayed on the web.

    Representative Ed Markey introduced the Twenty-first Century Communications and Video Accessibility Act of 2009 on June 26, 2009.  Quite simply, the bill has this as the goal:  “To ensure that individuals with disabilities have access to emerging Internet Protocol-based communication and video programming technologies in the 21st century.”

    In other words, it means that if I want to see old episodes of The Tonight Show or waste time watching Deal or No Deal– that I would have access to those episodes just like everyone else.

    Isn’t 30 years a long time to wait for captions on the web?

    Keep in mind, this doesn’t apply to user-generated content.  So if you toss a video on YouTube, no one is going to make you caption it.  But I sure would appreciate the access if you decided to make your content accessible. And something else to think about: someday your own hearing might go south and you’d appreciate a captioned web.

    The Coalition of Organizations for Accessible Technology has a petition to sign. Jamie Berke has a blog with tons of info:  Caption Action 2. Over on Facebook, a group has gathered to push the grassroots effort and get this bill passed.  Won’t you come and join us?

    Of course, just clicking on a Facebook group isn’t going to get a bill passed, but there is strength in numbers.  Facebook helped to save a deaf school from closing.

    I know you’re probably rolling your eyes and thinking, “Not another bill, Karen.”  But here’s the deal–if you contact your Senators and ask them to start a similar bill and contact your Representatives to support H.R. 3101 and help me get this passed and into the law books, I promise I won’t bother you again for a while.

    I’ll be too busy catching up on those Emergency episodes.

  • I Want to Live–Captioned Version

    Dear Bill Creswell:

    Thank you.  Thank you.  And thank you, again.

    Back in June, I wrote a post over at Disaboom about how frustrated I was to navigate through You Tube videos without captions.  I shared one of my favorite songs and posted the lyrics in the blog. 

    Along came Bill Creswell.  He left a comment:

    “Don’t forget, I take requests at billcreswell.wordpress.com.  “My tagline is captioning the internet one video at a time” 🙂  I have this one in my  “queue”.

    Time went by and the two of us became busy.  Yesterday, I found a wonderful post over at Bill’s blog– news that You Tube was enabling a captioning feature for users to add captions to their videos:

    You Tube Adds Captioning Feature

    So I left a comment and asked Bill about the John Denver feature and wondered if it was captioned.

    Bill delivered. 

    And so today, I want to share one of my favorite songs with my readers.  It is a John Denver song called, “I Want to Live.” Captioned.

    add your captions on TubeCaption.com

    http://www.tubecaption.com/watch?v=iuB3_HLcFfk&vcId=473

    Thank you, thank you, Bill for all the work you do. It is very much appreciated. May you have a wonderful weekend!